Norma Shearer
10 August, 1902
| 1.55 m
Actress
Soundtrack
Biography
She won a beauty contest at age fourteen. In 1920 her mother, Edith Shearer, took Norma and her sister Athole Shearer (Mrs. Howard Hawks) to New York. Ziegfeld rejected her for his "Follies," but she got work as an extra in several movies. She spent much money on eye doctor's services trying to correct her cross-eyed stare caused by a muscle weakness. Irving Thalberg had seen her early acting efforts and, when he joined Louis B. Mayer in 1923, gave her a five year contract. He thought she should retire after their marriage, but she wanted bigger parts. In 1927, she insisted on firing the director Viktor Tourjansky because he was unsure of her cross-eyed stare. Her first talkie was in Proces Mary Dugan (1929); four movies later, she won an Oscar in Rozwódka (1930). She intentionally cut down film exposure during the 1930s, relying on major roles in Thalberg's prestige projects: Barretowie z ulicy Wimpole (1934) and Romeo i Julia (1936) (her fifth Oscar nomination). Thalberg died of a second heart attack in September, 1936, at age 37. Norma wanted to retire, but MGM more-or-less forced her into a six-picture contract. David O. Selznick offered her the part of Scarlett O'Hara in Przeminęło z wiatrem (1939), but public objection to her cross-eyed stare killed the deal. She starred in Kobiety (1939), turned down the starring role in Pani Miniver (1942), and retired in 1942. Later that year she married Sun Valley ski instructor Martin Arrouge, eleven years younger than she (he waived community property rights). From then on, she shunned the limelight; she was in very poor health the last decade of her life.
Movies
A study of the lives and romantic entanglements of various interconnected women.